DESCRIPTION

giiEventPoll waits for specific events to become available on an input.
This call somewhat resembles the Unix select(2) call, but only for
LibGII events and is more portable. The function returns after an
event matching the given event mask is available or after the amount of
time specified by t has elapsed, whichever occurs first. If t is NULL,
there is no timeout.
The timeout value on return is updated to the time that would have been
remaining. So make sure to re-setup this value when calling
giiEventPoll in a loop.
giiEventSelect is the combination of giiEventPoll and select(2)
allowing to wait for both LibGII events and arbitrary file descriptors
in any of the three states. However, this function is not available if
the operating system does not support the select(2) call, not even as a
stub.
giiEventsQueued returns the number of events matching the specified
event mask that are currently queued in the input.
giiEventRead blocks for and transfers an event from the given input to
the location pointed to by ev. The event with the earliest timestamp
that matches the given mask is returned to the application.

RETURNVALUE

giiEventPoll returns a mask of available events (constrained by the
given mask). It is 0 if no events are available. On error, an
negative gii-error(3) code is returned.
giiEventSelect returns the same values as select(2). Unlike other
LibGGI/LibGII functions, it also uses errno. It will update the timeout
regardless of whether or not the system call does so.
giiEventsQueued returns the number of events.
giiEventRead returns the size of event on success, and 0 on error.

EXAMPLES

This is one of the various ways of coding an event-polling loop:
for(;;) {
tv.tv_sec = 0;
tv.tv_usec = 100; /* change to 0 for non-blocking behaviour */
ggiEventPoll(vis, emAll, &tv);
n = ggiEventsQueued(vis, emAll);
/* Process events in one gulp, when available */
while(n--) {
ggiEventRead(vis, &ggievent, emAll);
switch(ggievent.any.type) {
/* ... */
}
}
/* Do other stuff */
}
Note: This code uses the LibGGI functions and types instead of
the LibGII ones, since the former is the more common case.